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U.S. fast-food workers plan rallies demanding higher wages

Activists march during a protest demanding better wages for fast-food workers in Los Angeles last year. Fast-food employees have organized demonstrations in Philadelphia and throughout the U.S. to take place Tuesday.

U.S. fast food workers fighting for better wages enlisted students, healthcare workers and racial justice activists to swell the ranks of rallies set for Wednesday in 230 cities.

The latest wave of protests to press for pay increases to $15 an hour was expected to kick off in New York at dawn outside a McDonald's in Brooklyn, pick up momentum during the day and culminate in a march to Times Square during the evening rush hour, organizers said.

"On Tax Day, fast-food workers from Pittsburgh to Pasadena will walk off the job, while adjunct professors, home care, child care, airport, industrial laundry and Walmart workers will march and rally in what will be the most widespread mobilization ever by U.S. workers seeking higher pay," organizers said in a statement.

Fast-food workers will walk off the job and be joined at protests by students from 200 colleges and activists from the Black Lives Matter movement, which protests police brutality, they said.

The campaign by low-wage workers for higher pay has been building for several years as they protest that the U.S. federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour is not enough to lift them from poverty. Fast-food and retail chains are starting to respond, but their wage increases are generally below the level organizers are demanding.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc early this year said it would hike its minimum pay to $9 an hour and to $10 an hour in 2016. Rivals Target Corp and TJ Maxx followed suit in saying they would hike pay to $9 an hour.

McDonald's said it would raise pay at company-owned stores to $9 an hour, though that would not necessarily apply to the more than 90 percent of its 14,000 U.S. locations operated by independent franchisees.

The debate over the U.S. minimum wage is expected to emerge as a key issue in the run-up to the 2016 presidential election. Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton this week said it was unfair that many American families are facing financial hardship "when the average CEO makes about 300 times what the average worker makes."

Organizers said they chose to mobilize on April 15, the U.S. deadline for filing income tax returns, to highlight their complaint that many workers are forced to rely on public assistance to live.

"On Tax Day, fast-food workers from Pittsburgh to Pasadena will walk off the job, while adjunct professors, home care, child care, airport, industrial laundry and Walmart workers will march and rally in what will be the most widespread mobilization ever by U.S. workers seeking higher pay," organizers said in a statement.

Billed as a worldwide movement, job actions were also pledged in 100 cities from Sao Paolo to Tokyo on six continents, organizers said.